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How to make a healthy stir-fry

Cooking dinner at home has many advantages. When you prepare meals in your kitchen, you have the power to choose healthier recipes and ingredients. If you are looking for healthy and tasty dinner ideas, learn the simple art of stir-frying! Once you learn the basics, you can prepare an unlimited number of delicious dishes to make dinner exciting.

Stir it up!

Stir-frying is a fast way to cook small pieces of food in a hot pan or wok. As the name indicates, the food is constantly stirred while you cook it. You can prepare different vegetables, meats, seafood and poultry using this method.

In addition to being quick and easy, stir-frying is also healthy. It results in tender-crisp vegetables that retain more nutrients than if they were boiled. And since stir-frying requires only a small amount of oil, the fat content is low.

Use these five basic steps to create a perfect stir-fry:

1. Get the wok ready. An authentic stir-fry is made in a wok, which is a bowl-shaped pan. If you do not have a wok, you can use any large, shallow pan with a handle. You will also need a heat-resistant spatula or large spoon for stirring.

2. Choose an oil. Since a stir-fry is cooked at a high temperature, choose oil with a high smoke point. That means the oil will not emit smoke or unpleasant flavours. Oils with a high smoke point (440-470°F) include:

Safflower

Corn

Canola

Soybean

Sunflower

Peanut

If you want to use olive oil, choose a pure or refined olive oil (not extra virgin). Do not stir-fry in flax or hemp oil since they have very low smoke points (225°F).

You can also coat the wok with non-stick cooking spray instead of using oil. This method is used in Sweet chili tofu stir-fry.

The meat should be cut into thin strips so it cooks quickly and evenly. Once it’s cooked, remove it from the heat. Use a thermometer to unsure your protein is cooked to a safe internal temperature.

4. Cook the vegetables. Add garlic to the hot wok. Once sizzling, add your favourite vegetables and cook until tender-crisp:

Broccoli

Cauliflower

Carrots

Celery

Baby corn

Mushrooms

Eggplant

Peppers

Bok choy

5. Add flavour. Many stir-fry sauces are high in sodium. For example, soy sauce has over 1000 mg of sodium per tablespoon. A healthy diet should contain no more than 1500 mg of sodium per day. Instead of a salty sauce, flavour your stir-fry with:

Beware of reduced sodium sauces that say “25% less salt.” They may still be high in sodium. For example, soy sauce with 25% less sodium still has 750 mg sodium per tablespoon! Replace half of the soy sauce in recipes with balsamic, rice or wine vinegar instead.

If you can’t replicate the flavour of a high-sodium sauce in a certain dish, add a teaspoon or two at the end of cooking. This will give the dish more flavour than several tablespoons added during cooking and the resulting dish will contain less sodium. Add fresh herbs just before serving to maximize their bold flavour.